Cane Sugar Vs. Fructose

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PAM MURPHY Last Updated: Oct 03, 2017

Pam Murphy

Pam Murphy is a writer specializing in fitness, childcare and business-related topics. She is a member of the National Association for Family Child Care and contributes to various websites. Murphy is a licensed childcare professional and holds a Bachelor of Arts in English from the University of West Georgia.

Fructose occurs naturally in fruit.

Cane sugar and fructose are both simple carbohydrates that provide 4 calories per gram. Although cane sugar, or sucrose, differs slightly from fructose in terms of molecular structure, both are sugars that add calories without improving the nutritional composition of the food. Your body uses both cane sugar and fructose for immediate energy if needed, or stores them for later.

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Cane Sugar

An average sugar cane stalk yields around 0.3 lb. of sugar, according to the University of Florida. Cane sugar can be refined and marketed as white table sugar or refined and flavored with molasses as brown sugar. Cane sugar is also sold unrefined as raw cane sugar. Raw cane sugar contains natural nutrients that the refining process strips away.

Fructose

Fructose occurs naturally in foods such as fruit and honey. Manufacturers derive fructose from foods such as corn. Fructose accounts for roughly 8 to 10 percent of human energy intake, according to Georgia Highlands College. This includes natural sources of fructose as well as fructose added to foods. Fructose tastes around 1.2 times sweeter than table sugar, and manufacturers sometimes use it as a sweetener in processed foods.

Chemical Composition

Both fructose and cane sugar are simple sugars. A simple sugar contains one or two sugar molecules. Fructose is a monosaccharide, meaning that it consists of a single sugar molecule. Cane sugar is sucrose, a double sugar or disaccharide, which consists of two sugar molecules, glucose and fructose. Crystalline fructose, not to be confused with high-fructose corn syrup, contains only fructose molecules. High-fructose corn syrup, on the other hand, has a similar composition to cane sugar in that it contains both glucose and fructose.

Considerations

In the Dietary Guidelines for Americans 2010, the U.S. Department of Agriculture points out that added sugars in general account for around 16 percent of energy intake in the typical American diet. Added sugars include fructose, cane sugar or other sugars such as molasses, honey, maple syrup and corn syrup solids. Everyone should limit daily calories from added sugars to no more than 150 calories for men and 100 calories for women, according to the American Heart Association.